Front fringing reef of North Direction Island, GBR - one of the reefs under survey by the Long Term Monitoring Team. Photo: AIMS LTMP

Monitoring on the Great Barrier Reef

For over 20 years AIMS has been surveying the health of 47 midshore and offshore reefs across the Great Barrier Reef region. The Long-term Monitoring Program represents the longest continuous record of change in reef communities over such a large geographic area.

What we monitor and why

A team of trained divers surveys fish by underwater visual census, and records corals and other bottom-dwelling organisms along the same sections of reef each visit.

The data also provides awareness of other threatsto the reef (such as outbreaks of coral disease) and other issues of concern to reef managers.

A separate component of the program monitors the effects of the 2004 Great Barrier Reef Marine Park re-zoning plan.

A crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) consumes its coral prey in shallow water on a reef in the Pompey sector of the Great Barrier Reef. Photo: AIMS LTMP

Inshore reef monitoring under Reef Plan

Inshore reefs (those that can be reached from shore by a small boat) are vulnerable to more threats than those further from shore. Thirty-two inshore reefs are monitored under a separate inshore reef monitoring plan under the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority’s Reef Water Quality Protection Plan (known as the ‘Reef Plan’).

Monitoring in Western Australia

AIMS has been monitoring fish and coral communities on Scott Reef on the North-West Shelf since 1994. The data help us to understand Scott Reef’s natural variability, and how its isolation from other reefs in the Indian Ocean, and consequent dependence upon self-recruitment, affects the dynamics of local populations and resilience of communities to disturbances like cyclones.

More information

For more information on the midshore and offshore reef monitoring program contact Dr Hugh Sweatman.